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2329 Avent Ferry Road. Holly Springs, North Carolina, U.S. Completed. 1805. The Norris-Holland-Hare House is a historic Federal style farm house in Holly Springs, North Carolina. It is the oldest building in the town of Holly Springs. The house was used as a field hospital by the Union Army following the Battle of Bentonville of the American ...
FIPS code. 37-32260 [4] GNIS feature ID. 2405854 [3] Website. hollyspringsnc.us. Holly Springs is a town in Wake County, North Carolina, United States. As of the 2020 census, the town population was 41,239, a 67% increase from 2010.
Holly Springs High School. Address. 5329 Cass Holt Road. Holly Springs, North Carolina. 27540. United States. Coordinates. 35°37′41″N 78°50′56″W / 35.6280°N 78.8490°W / 35.6280; -78.8490. Information.
United States. Surface area. 50 acres (20 ha) Bass Lake is an artificial lake in Holly Springs, North Carolina. [ 1] The lake is owned by the Town of Holly Springs. Bass Lake was purchased in the 1950s by James Harry Cornell, who hosted a fishing club at the private lake. The lake was originally known as Mills Pond. [ 2]
U.S. National Register of Historic Places. Front elevation Leslie-Alford-Mims House, October 2013. Show map of North Carolina Show map of the United States Show all. Location. 100 Avent Ferry Rd., Holly Springs, North Carolina. Coordinates. 35°39′07″N 78°50′11″W. / 35.65194°N 78.83639°W / 35.65194; -78.83639.
GNIS feature ID. 2710673. Holly Springs is an unincorporated community located in the Mount Airy Township of Surry County, North Carolina, United States. The community is generally centered on the intersection of Holly Springs Road and Reeves Mill Road, southeast of Bannertown. The Mount Airy/Surry County Airport is located in Holly Springs.
MPS. Wake County MPS. NRHP reference No. 10000164 [1] Added to NRHP. April 7, 2010. Holly Springs Masonic Lodge is a historic Masonic Lodge located at Holly Springs, Wake County, North Carolina. It was built about 1852, and is a two-story, Greek Revival influenced frame building with a side gable roof. It has a one-story, hip roofed front porch.
Waynesville: Confederate Soldiers Monument (1940) Wilkesboro: Confederate Soldiers Monument (1998) Wilson: Memorial Drinking Fountain (1926). This fountain, like a similar one from the same artist in Louisburg, NC, originally had "white" and "colored" water fountains, separated by the Confederate flag.